The History of the Present: Foundational Meta-Narratives in Contemporary North Korean Discourse

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S/N Korean Humanities Vol.1 No.2 pp.101-117 ISSN : 2384-0668(Print)
ISSN : 2384-0692(Online)

Stanislav L. Tkachenko
tkachenko@sir.edu
Professor, St. Petersburg State University


Received April 30 2015; Revised version received June 05 2015; Accepted July 15 2015

Abstract

Since Ukraine’s crisis started in February 2014, the relations of the Russian Federation with Western powers deteriorated significantly and have reached the level of the Cold War conflict. That is why the “Pivot to Asia” is currently the key characteristics of its foreign policy strategy. This article analyses several scenarios of future security regime in Asia as well as Russia’s vision of possible developments in the Korean peninsula. It concludes that the strategic aim of the international community of nations nowadays should be peace-keeping, conflict resolution, maintaining status-quo in those regions (the Korean peninsula, for example), where an immediate solution is impossible.


Key Words : Russia, Korean Peninsula, “Pivot to Asia”, Multipolarity, Diplomacy

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